SHANGHAI, CHINA - 1995/10/01: Hong Kong actor Leslie Cheung Kwok Wing with Chinese actor Xie Tian, during the filming of 'Temptress Moon' in Shanghai Film Studios. (Photo by Gerhard Joren/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Cover Hong Kong legend Leslie Cheung in the movie ‘Temptress Moon’ (Photo: Getty Images)
SHANGHAI, CHINA - 1995/10/01: Hong Kong actor Leslie Cheung Kwok Wing with Chinese actor Xie Tian, during the filming of 'Temptress Moon' in Shanghai Film Studios. (Photo by Gerhard Joren/LightRocket via Getty Images)

It’s Leslie Cheung’s birthday today. Tatler marks the occasion by revisiting some of the beloved Hong Kong film star’s most iconic on-screen looks

Leslie Cheung was a pivotal figure in Hong Kong’s entertainment scene in the 1980s and 1990s when the industry enjoyed its golden era. In his three-decade-long career, Cheung not only played fun, suave or charming characters that won the hearts of fans, but he also pushed the creative boundaries by playing experimental, gender-fluid roles that required him to sport avant-garde looks.

While not all of his looks were celebrated at the time, his adventurous spirit and boldness have cemented him as an icon of Hong Kong cinema today.

Tatler revisits some of these signature looks that redefined local cinema’s history.

In case you missed it: Hong Kong’s new Leslie Cheung tribute musical makes its debut

Casual street look

Tatler Asia
Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing (right) and Maggie Cheung Man-yuk (left) who starred in the Wong Kar-wai's movie "Days of Being Wild".
Above Leslie Cheung (right) and Maggie Cheung (left) in the Wong Kar-wai’s movie “Days of Being Wild” (Photo: Michael Tsui / Getty Images)
Tatler Asia
Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing in the Wong Kar-wai 1990 movie "Days of Being Wild". (Photo by MICHAEL TSUI/South China Morning Post via Getty Images)
Above Leslie Cheung in “Days of Being Wild” (Photo: Michael Tsui / Getty Images)
Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing (right) and Maggie Cheung Man-yuk (left) who starred in the Wong Kar-wai's movie "Days of Being Wild".
Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing in the Wong Kar-wai 1990 movie "Days of Being Wild". (Photo by MICHAEL TSUI/South China Morning Post via Getty Images)

In Wong Kar-wai’s 1990 crime-romance film Days of Being Wild, Leslie Cheung plays the lead role of Yuddy, a lost young man in Hong Kong, who longs for freedom in a complicated social environment. His reckless, rebellious image is underscored by his slicked-back hair, a white vest and an earth-coloured plaid shirt—a commonly seen casual street look in the city in the 1990s.

Unruly hair

Tatler Asia
Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing starred in the movie "The Bride with White Hair 2".  1993 (Photo by MICHAEL TSUI/South China Morning Post via Getty Images)
Above Leslie Cheung in a still from the film “The Bride with White Hair 2” (Photo: Getty Images)
Tatler Asia
Taiwanese film star Brigitte Lin Ching-hsia (right) with Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing in the movie "The Bride with White Hair 2".  1993 (Photo by MICHAEL TSUI/South China Morning Post via Getty Images)
Above Leslie Cheung and Brigitte Lin in “The Bride with White Hair 2” (Photo: Getty Images)
Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing starred in the movie "The Bride with White Hair 2".  1993 (Photo by MICHAEL TSUI/South China Morning Post via Getty Images)
Taiwanese film star Brigitte Lin Ching-hsia (right) with Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing in the movie "The Bride with White Hair 2".  1993 (Photo by MICHAEL TSUI/South China Morning Post via Getty Images)

Cheung co-starred with Taiwanese actor Brigitte Lin in the 1993 action movie The Bride with White Hair 2. He played the role of martial arts apprentice Zhuo Yihang, whose long dark robe, created by Oscar-winning Japanese costume designer Wada Emi, highlights his character’s sorrows after undergoing many vicissitudes of fate. Emi further paired Cheung’s costume with loose and messy hair to echo his unruly yet chivalrous character. This hairstyle was a breakthrough for men’s hairstyles in Hong Kong films.

Peking Opera actor

Tatler Asia
Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing at the backstage in the Chen Kaige's movie "Farewell My Concubine",  30 April 1992. (Photo by WAH KIU YAT PO/South China Morning Post via Getty Images)
Above Leslie Cheung in “Farewell My Concubine” (Photo: Getty Images)
Leslie Cheung Kwok-wing at the backstage in the Chen Kaige's movie "Farewell My Concubine",  30 April 1992. (Photo by WAH KIU YAT PO/South China Morning Post via Getty Images)

Leslie Cheung’s experimental spirit is best celebrated in Chen Kaige’s epic historical drama Farewell My Concubine (1993), which portrays the relationship—with its homoerotic subtext—between two Peking Opera actors, one of whom plays an emperor and the other his concubine in the opera. Cheung acts as the concubine and dons the elaborate traditional headpiece and costumes. His convincing act, paired with the opulent costumes, delivered a concubine figure we empathise with. While cross-dressing is a common practice in Peking opera, Cheung was bold to take on this onscreen role when men portraying gay or transgender figures were not common in Hong Kong cinema.

Charming, sleek and handsome

Tatler Asia
SUZHOU, CHINA - 1996/01/01: Chinese movie actress Gong Li with Hong Kong actor Leslie Cheung Kwok Wing during the filming of 'Temptress Moon'. (Photo by Gerhard Joren/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Above Leslie Cheung plays a suave gangster in “Temptress Moon” (Photo: Getty Images)
Tatler Asia
Leslie Cheung
Above Leslie Cheung plays a handsome young man in “All’s Well, Ends Well”
SUZHOU, CHINA - 1996/01/01: Chinese movie actress Gong Li with Hong Kong actor Leslie Cheung Kwok Wing during the filming of 'Temptress Moon'. (Photo by Gerhard Joren/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Leslie Cheung

In the 1996 movie Temptress Moon, Cheung plays a gangster who charms the eldest daughter of the Pang family, played by Gong Li, for money and ends up falling in love with her. Cheung’s suave look is a combination of glossy hair, a white shirt and a vest—a charming appearance that contrasts his character’s role as a fraud.

In the 1992 comedy All’s Well, Ends Well, Cheung played the androgynous second son of the wealthy Chang family. In most of the scenes, he is presented as this handsome and flirtatious young man wearing an elegant black sequined top.


This article was originally published in Chinese. Read it here

Topics

Zabrina is the Senior Editor, Arts and Culture of Tatler Hong Kong. She specialises in performing arts, visual art and film. Her wanderlust was first fuelled by the Mighty Rovers Antarctica Expedition 2010. Over the years, she has interviewed A-list artists and filmmakers, including Oscar winners Chlóe Zhao and Tim Yip, Golden Horse winner Sylvia Chang, In the Mood for Love cinematographer Christopher Doyle, Pachinko author Min Jin Lee, and Coachella’s first Chinese solo singer Jackson Wang. She won gold at the WAN-IFRA Asian Media Awards for her 2021 feature on the waves of hate crimes targeting Asian Americans.